Arch Enemy Entertainment has spent years building a dynamic "bench" of creators, and now the comic-book publisher's unleashing them seven days a week.

Having introduced books such as the sci-fi series F-OO Fighters and supernatural comic Aurora Rose into the digital space, Arch Enemy's debuting six new works and returning a recent favorite in a lineup of series beginning Monday and exclusively presented by USA TODAY.

"I see them as a whole bunch of new beings, new actual entities, that's coming," says Percy Carey, president of Arch Enemy. "Like Grant Morrison used to say to me, new blood. It's new blood, new births, new babies being born."

The daily lineup includes a variety of different series and genres.

Mondays will feature new pages from Michael Sarrao's superhero series Unmasked, featuring an intrepid reporter and the new do-gooders of Seastone City.

Gamers have Tuesdays to look forward to with Game Boys, Neil Herndon's story about a pair of teenagers who hide from reality in a video game but find that things come back with them when they return to the real world.

Nikita star Shane West continues his stint in comics on Wednesdays beginning with the third issue of his series The Big Bad Wolf, starring a brother and sister who are bounty hunters trying to kick a pesky werewolf curse.

Thursdays bring Kansas, a new spin on The Wizard of Oz mythology by the Aurora Rose team of Arch Enemy founder and CEO William Wilson and Jason Stevens that has the Wicked Witch traveling from Oz to the Midwest and up to no good.

Fans of Homeland and political intrigue will want to check out Neil Thompson's The Diplomat on Fridays, a new series about a former secret operative who uses his new international gig to save the day.

And Sundays have the latest artwork from Jey Odin with his manga series Liar, about an undercover cop who gets lost in his own world.

In addition, coming soon on Wednesdays will be The Counselor by Thomas Leopold, who won an initiative hosted by Stan Lee and Todd McFarlane two years ago to find the next great superhero.

"What makes Arch Enemy is finding people and voices," Wilson says. "There are so many people that all they want to do is tell a great story but they're not allowed to have the outlet. Percy and I created a company with a vision that's always been quality over quantity.

"We're not just running up pages for the sake of pages. We're not going to make overtures about saving the industry. We have a clear vision of how we want our company to be run, how we want to be seen, what we want to be associated with."

Having a whole slate of titles is something Arch Enemy has been discussing for a while, according to Carey, but it took time to find the right people and properties with all different styles.

"It's a perfect fit," he adds. "It's like boxing. That's what makes a good fight, when you bring two styles together and they complement each other but at the same time they oppose each other.

"That's kind of like us with the illustrators and with the writers. We complement each other, but the things that we don't have in common, they make us stronger."